As I was walking home, I was thinking about the '88 strike. Ugh! But what we have now, that we didn't have in '88 was hundreds of boutique channels. We didn't have a channel like BBC America. Now, should the strike be a prolonged one, they might be one of the few sources of new scripted TV there is. SciFi will probably have new stuff as well, at least in the B movie department. Which led me to wondering: will we see the big networks buying rights to air shows from the UK or Canada? And what about US shows that are made in Canada? I wonder what the small print on different contracts is as far as those productions being able to hire Canadian writers? And last, but not least, if this is a long strike, and goes as long as the '88 one, we could conceivably see the writers come back only to have the actors walk out in June. Dang!
An Hour Later: According to Deadline Hollywood, a Federal mediator has intervened.
An Hour Later: According to Deadline Hollywood, a Federal mediator has intervened.
no subject
Date: 2007-11-03 04:51 pm (UTC)From:no subject
Date: 2007-11-03 04:59 pm (UTC)From:That makes perfect sense and is really, really understandable. If people aren't working/earning they aren't spending. BUT there is a drive from corporations to own product in perpetuity. Simon & Schuster tried to do this to their back catalog earlier this year and the authors guild went nuts, certain contracts with the BBC are so drafted. And so it's the creative talent behind camera that gets shafted *sigh* I really wish we didn't live in an age of golden parachutes (that's a nod to the departing head of Merril Lynch and his wacking huge retirement bonus) and where the rewards for good work were more even.
I'm paraphriasing various blogs I lurked on last night - it seems that the mediator was called into town three weeks or so ago... either meetings didn't happen or... well there is some rumour circulating over rows about chairs and seating but that might have been a whole other instance.
There's an interesting article about Canadian TV production which will come up if you google. I think Canada and the UK may actually benefit - medium term - if the strike holds.